Working Women, Working Men: Sao Paulo & the Rise of Brazil’s Industrial Working Class, 1900–1955 9780822379812

In Working Women, Working Men, Joel Wolfe traces the complex historical development of the working class in Sào Paulo, B

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WORKING WOMEN, WORKING MEN

WORKING WOMEN, WORKING MEN

Sao Paulo and the Rise of Brazil's Industrial Working Class,

1900-1955

JOEL WOLFE

DUKE UNIVERSITY PRESS

1993

Durham and London

For Traci

© 1993 Duke University Press All rights reserved Printed in the United States of America on acid-free paper = Designed by Cherie Holma Westmoreland Typeset in Weiss by Keystone Typesetting, Inc. library of Congress Cataloging-inPublication Data appear on the last printed page of this book. Third printing, 1998

Contents

List of Tables

vii

Acknowledgments

ix

List of Acronyms

xi

Introduction

CHAPTER ONE

Industrialization and the Birth

of Sao Paulo's Working-Class Movement, 1900-1924

CHAPTER TWO

6

"Order and Progress" and Revolution

in Industrial Sao Paulo, 1925-1935

CHAPTER THREE

40

Class Struggle versus Conciliac;iio:

The Estado Novo, 1935-1942

CHAPTER FOUR

World War II and the Struggle

for Citizenship, 1942-1945

CHAPTER FIVE

94

The Industrialists' Democracy in

Sao Paulo, 1945- 1950

CHAPTER SIX

70

125

Factory Commissions and the

Triumph of Sao Paulo's Working-Class Movement, 1950-1955

v

160

CONTENTS

EPILOGUE

From Union Democracy to

Democratic Politics?

189

Appendix: Interviews and Oral Histories Notes

199

Bibliography Index

289 309

vi

195

Tables

1.2

Workers by Sex and Age in Thirty-One Textile Mills in the State of Sao Paulo, 1912 8 Index of Wholesale Prices for Foodstuffs in Sao Paulo, 1912-

2.1 2.2 2.3

Index of Brazilian Industrial Output, 1918-1930 43 Daily Wages in Sao Paulo, 1925-1927 47 Index of Industrial Output in the State of Sao Paulo, 1928-

3.1

Membership in the Sao Paulo Textile Workers' Union, 1938-

3.2

Membership in the Sao Paulo Metalworkers' Union, 1936-

3.3

Index of Industrial Output in the State of Sao Paulo, 1935-

3.4 3.5 3.6

Characteristics of Manufacturing Industries in the State of Sao Paulo, 1933-1939 89 Wages and the Cost of Living in Sao Paulo, 1935-1945 90 Deficits in Budgets of 117 Paulistano Working-Class Families,

4.1

Index of Industrial Output in the State of Sao Paulo, 1935-

4.2

Industrial Wages and the Cost of Living in Sao Paulo, 1940-

4.3 5.1 5.2

Cost-of-Living Indexes for Sao Paulo, 1939-1945 106 Imports of Textile Equipment to Brazil, 1940-1952 147 Production and Employment in the Textiles Industry, 1945-

1.1

1917

1935 1942 1942 1942

1939 1945 1945

1952 5.3 5.4

10

59 78 83 88

92 98 102

148

Importation of Capital Goods and Production of Machines in Brazil, 1944-1950 151 Cost-of-Living and Wage Indexes in Sao Paulo, 19451951

154

vii

TABLES 5.5 6.1 6.2

Paulistanos' Electoral Preferences in October 1948 157 Cost of Living and Value of Minimum Wage in Sao Paulo, 19441951 169 Cost of Living and Value of Minimum Wage in Sao Paulo, 19511957 186

viii

Acknowledgments

Over the course of researching and writing this book I have been fortunate to receive guidance and encouragement from many friends in the United States and Brazil. This project began as a dissertation at the University of Wisconsin, under the direction of Florencia Mallon and Thomas Skidmore. Tom Skidmore has been a constant source of inspiration and support. From my first days in Madison to the present day, Tom has been a mentor, a friend, and most of all, an example of a historian and teacher for me to try to emulate. F1orencia's creativity, passion, and good humor have likewise inspired both me and my work. Her influence on me has been great, and I thank her for it. Steve Stem also provided an intellectually challenging yet supportive environment for me in graduate school. He, along with Tom and Florencia, set an example of a committed scholar for all of us in the Latin American History graduate program. Jeanne Boydston of the Women's History Program also provided invaluable advice and opened new avenues of inquiry. I am grateful for her encouragement and support. Several other scholars read and commented on the entire manuscript. Even though they are good friends, they didn't pull any punches. I thank Marshall Eakin, Tom Spear, and Barbara Weinstein who read the dissertation and helped me make it a book manuscript, and I thank Tom Holloway and Mike Conniff who helped me make it a book. Their frank and constructive criticism has helped me immeasurably. Larry Malley of Duke University Press has been a wonderful editor and a good friend. Mindy Conner and Jean Brady have contributed careful copy editing and other important assistance. Many friends contributed to the various stages of this project: I would like to thank Judith Allen, Reid Andrews, Kathy Brown, Paula Consolini, Todd Diacon,Jim Dickmeyer, Dario Euraque, Luis Figueroa, Colin Gordon, Linda Gordon, Michael Greenwald, Michael Hall, Roger Kittleson, Regina Kunzel, Maria Helena P. T Machado, Jim Mahon, Frank McCann, John Monteiro, Aquilas Nogueira Mendes, Ted Pearson, Sarah Rosenson, Chris Waters, Julius Weinberg, and

ix

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

Helio Zylberstajn for their encouragement and friendship over the years. Librarians and archivists in Brazil and the United States, as well as the interlibrary loan staffs at the University of Wisconsin and Williams College, provided valuable assistance. Carmen Lucia Evangelho Lopes and Carla Donadelli of the Centro de Memoria Sindical in Sao Paulo merit special thanks Their encouragement and many introductions to unionists and other activists helped me with various stages of the research, especially the interviews. Carlos Battesti (Carlao) of the Federation of Industries also provided timely assistance. A generous grant from the Department of Education's FulbrightHays program funded the research in Brazil in 1986 and 1987. A summer travel grant from the Tinker Foundation allowed me to visit Brazil in 1985 to prepare my dissertation topic. I am grateful for both grants. I should also thank the Department of Education and the University of Wisconsin for fellowships that funded my graduate study. The Williams College History Department has also provided a nurturing environment for me as I completed work on this book, and faculty research support funded a trip to Brazil that allowed me to complete work on this book and to begin my next project. My appreciation is also deeply felt for my fellow activists in the Teaching Assistants' Association, as well as past activists who founded the union in the early 19705, for helping to include health insurance in TA salaries and fellowships. My family has supported me intellectually and financially over the years. My parents, Donald and Barbara Wolfe, first piqued my interest in history and politics. My aunt, Florence Greenberg, introduced me to the world outside the Philadelphia area. Her encouragement to study other cultures and her generous support over the years have helped in innumerable ways. My wife Traci has supplied good humor, a healthy dose of cynicism, encouragement and love. I thank her and her family for all of their support. My final thanks are to the subjects of this book The workers, union activists, retired workers, and other Brazilians who took the time to tell me their stories provided the most valuable help of all. By taking me into their factories, union halls, and homes they allowed me into their lives. For that I offer my deepest thanks and the hope that I did justice to their history

Somerville, Massachusetts November 1992

x

Acronyms

ANL CETEX CIFTSP

CL T

COB

CRT CGTB

DIEESE

DOPS ECLA FEB

FIESP

FOSP

IAPI

IBOPE

IDORT

M LIT

PCB PSD

Alian